Turkish shelling into Syrian Kurdish canton kills six

Heavy Turkish shelling across the border into the Kurdish stronghold of Afrin in north-western Syria has killed six US-backed Kurdish fighters and wounded eight others.
2 min read
08 September, 2016
File Photo: Afrin has been under YPG control since regime forces pulled out in 2012.

Heavy Turkish shelling across the border into Kurdish-held areas of north-western Syria killed six US-backed Kurdish fighters and wounded several others on Thursday.

The artillery fire struck the village of Surke in the de facto Kurdish canton of Afrin late on Wednesday, a local source told The New Arab.

The source said that said eight Kurdish security forces were injured in the attack and that the death toll is likely to rise.

The Afrin Canton's media office has released a statement criticising the "unprovoked attack".

"No bullets have ever been fired towards the Turkish military stationed on the border," it read.

"We condemn this attack, which we consider military provocation and incitement by the Turkish army to ignite the flames of war."

The majority-Kurdish Afrin area has been under the control of the Kurdish People's Protection Units [YPG] since regime forces pulled out in 2012.

It has come under intermittent artillery fire by Ankara which regards the YPG as an extension of the outlawed rebel Kurdistan Workers Party [PKK] that has been waging an insurgency in southeastern Turkey for three decades.

But it has not been a direct target of the unprecedented ground incursion which Ankara launched on August 24 targeting both the YPG and the Islamic State group [IS].

Turkish leaders have said a major goal of the intervention was to prevent the YPG and their allies from joining up the Afrin enclave with the large swathe of territory they control in northeastern Syria to create a contiguous autonomous region along much of the border.

A total of 19 Kurdish and allied fighters have been killed since the incursion began, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Turkish troops and their Syrian rebel allies have now occupied a border strip stretching from the Euphrates River to the Afrin enclave, after ousting the last IS fighters last weekend.

Turkish operations against the YPG have drawn criticism from Washington which has urged both sides to focus their sights on IS.

Washington regards the Kurdish militia as the most effective force fighting IS on the ground in Syria and has provided it with weapons and military advisers.